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« 3 examples of French overheard in Montréal + 1 question answered (#642)
4 things to learn in French from 1 Mike Ward tweet (#644) »

5 solid ways to improve your listening comprehension in French (#643)

15 July 2013 by OffQc

“Help! I think I speak pretty good French, but I still have so much trouble understanding what people are saying!”

If that describes you, know that you’re not alone. Improving your listening skills takes time — a lot of it. If you’re struggling to understand spoken French, it doesn’t mean that you don’t have a gift for languages. We all have to work on it. It just means that you need to revise what you’re doing to avoid fumbling along without making progress.

Seeing improvement in your listening skills is a lot like losing weight (or gaining it). You only see the changes in hindsight after a long period has passed. You don’t see the changes on a day-to-day basis. If you start following some or all of the suggestions below, you can be sure that your listening skills will improve.

By the way, I’m not going to include “speak with francophones” in this list. That one’s so obvious that you already knew you should be doing it.

1. Speak with francophones

OK, I lied. Speak with francophones! There can be no better listening practice than speaking with francophones. Start with just one francophone. One-on-one conversations will reform your French in ways that you can’t even imagine if you’re not doing this yet. In one-on-one conversations, you have to listen to what your friend is saying for the conversation to continue.

Please don’t be one of those people who thinks that they need to improve their French just a little more before speaking. That’s missing the whole point of learning French. Nobody cares about your perfect or imperfect French, people care about you.

The francophone you find doesn’t even need to be québécois. Just find a francophone and start building a relationship.

If you are in fact already speaking with francophones very regularly but still feel like you’re struggling to understand spoken French — relax. You’re doing everything right. Your listening skills are improving, even if you don’t see it right now. Keep doing what you’re doing.

2. Familiarise yourself with more vocabulary

Yes, become familiar with the vocabulary specific to Quebec French, but please don’t neglect French vocabulary in general. Sometimes I see certain learners get so hung up with wanting to learn all the typical québécois words (nothing wrong with that) that they forget to learn even the most basic and important vocabulary common to all francophones (that’s a problem).

Become familiar with vocab however it is that you like to do it. You like word lists? Go nuts. Flash cards? Flash away. Read the newspaper? Browse the dictionary? Do it. Just do something that you enjoy and that you’ll be inclined to do often enough.

The point of this isn’t to study vocabulary. Really, I don’t think that you’ll learn vocabulary by studying it. The point of this is to make an initial contact with lots of vocabulary on your own so that when you’re doing the more important work of speaking with francophones or listening to French, you’ll hear that vocab again and have a better chance of understanding what you hear. And that’s when you’ll learn the vocab for real.

3. Listen to the radio

I know of learners who have made incredible progress in French after listening to the radio. I’ve recommended it numerous times on OffQc: 98,5 fm. It’s all-talk radio on weekdays, which means that it’s very dense with spoken French. You can listen to it live on the radio in Montréal, or listen online from anywhere.

Again, if I’ve insisted so much on 98,5 fm, it’s because I’ve seen the success that other learners have had with it with my own eyes (or ears). If this station isn’t for you, no problem, there are others to choose from. Pick something you like and listen to it. But really listen to it. Don’t just keep noise on in the background for the sake of it — pay attention to what you’re hearing.

4. Watch television series

OffQc is full of examples from québécois television series. This isn’t an accident! I’ve chosen the language examples that you’ve discovered on OffQc because they’re pertinent to everyday language situations. Three television series that I’ve quoted from extensively on OffQc are Les Parent, 19-2 and La Galère.

These three certainly aren’t the only québécois series that prove useful, but I’ve consistently gone back to them time and time again because of their pertinence, quality and entertainment appeal. You can watch films too, but the advantage to picking series is that they have many episodes and are produced in several seasons’ worth.

The most important consideration, of course, is to watch something that interests you. There’s not much point forcing yourself to sit through something that you feel is dead boring. You’re not going to become hooked enough to want to continue. Keep looking for something that you fall in love with, then listen, listen, listen.

Don’t just watch an episode once and be done with it. Watch it the first time to enjoy it. Watch it a second time to become even more familiar with it. Listen a third time, and then a fourth. You get the idea. The more you listen to it, the more that language is going to worm its way into your head and the better you’ll become at listening.

5. Every single day, baby

As a bare minimum, spend one to two hours a day of listening to French or taking part in French conversation. If you want to pick up steam in French though, I say increase it to the highest amount that you can manage, without driving yourself crazy. There is time for it. (No, you don’t need to spend quite so much time on Facebook.)

I don’t want to be a downer, but if the number of hours you spend per month listening to French and taking part in conversation can be counted on the fingers of one hand, you’re not doing enough. This is why you feel like you’re struggling to understand.

The number of hours should be more like the number of fingers on both your hands and all the toes on your feet. And then add to that all the fingers on my hands and all the toes on my feet. (OK, maybe not my feet because I’m missing some toes. Somebody else’s feet.) And then multiply that by three. Or four…

Increase the hours dramatically and you can be sure that your listening comprehension will improve. There’s nothing magical about it, honest.

Enjoy your journey!

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Posted in Entries #601-650 | Tagged 19-2, 5 FM, 98, flash card, foot, français québécois, La Galère, Les Parent, listening, Québécois French, radio, speaking, television, vocabulary | 6 Comments

6 Responses

  1. on 15 July 2013 at 14:40 P

    Felix
    Your post is very timely. This is exactly what I am struggling with!
    As usual, your suggestions are right on, and your encouragements/reassurances are very much appreciated.


  2. on 16 July 2013 at 02:42 Eva

    Beautiful entry, and all very true.
    After a month of doing all of the above including at minimum 40 minutes of conversation in French a day (averaging over an hour and a half on weekends) I have to say I’ve made incredible progress in speaking French and feel completely at ease starting a conversation with everyone but my boyfriend. Sure, I make small mistakes here and there, but my words flow out smoothly and Francophones feel talking to me.

    Before this month of intense French conversation, I spent 6 months following your blog and watching and hour or two of Quebecois TV or Podcasts daily and always had radio canada on in my car, and I had thought my progress was quick because I had reached a point where had no trouble understanding the ideas behind what I heard. After this month, I can honestly say that I can passively watch a show or movie and have no issues understanding the very words spoken, and the expressions used. And I wasn’t even conversing with people from Quebec!

    The TV shows did plant their seeds though, as there was a moment when I was having a group conversation on skype in French and someone had invited their Quebecois cousin who came from Montreal. After 30 minutes I realised that the both of us were dominating the conversation, simply because I was the only person who was sensitised enough to their accent to feel at ease talking with him. (This group is a mixture of intermediate, advanced and native speakers)

    Learning to understand a language is like fine tuning your ears to hear the subtle differences in intonation, which can take months and countless hours of practice to achieve if you do it daily.

    A very Quebecois podcast I’d recommend is Pod Probleme. It has loads of expressions and is full of very natural accented speech.


  3. on 10 August 2013 at 18:15 Ash Kumar

    What I have a particular problem with is that I am totally not at a level where I can being to understand most of what is being spoken on the TV shows or radio. I understand a few words here and there but for the most part, my A1-A2 level french lands me perfectly in a deluge of sounds that I can never seem to wrap my head around.

    I would love to be able to follow all the pieces of advice on this post, but if anything, I see myself frustrated and mentally exhausted, through entire segments of french audio, whether through TV shows or radio, and completely just listening to what seems like a wall of incomprehensible noise. I am currently trudging through french-subtitles versions of french-dubbed American TV shows in hopes of reaching that level of critical mass at which I can perhaps begin to understand some of the stuff spoken without relying on subtitles exclusively.


    • on 12 August 2013 at 17:42 OffQc

      Ash, here’s my response:

      https://offqc.com/2013/08/12/how-to-get-past-the-wall-of-incomprehensible-noise-in-french-663/


  4. on 6 July 2015 at 03:47 willy

    First time I heard french conversation, I got no idea what they were talking about not even a word. Even though, I had memorized around hundreds words from some games for 2 weeks. The liasson makes everything difficult.

    Then I began to listen to some conversation from youtube, now I can listen to some words, not really full sentence but I guess it’s still a progress for 6 weeks of learning.


    • on 6 July 2015 at 03:48 willy

      Ohya, how come I forgot to say thank you.

      Thank you by the way for the advicess



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